Lollipop Day - 1962 | The Archivist Presents | #355

Tomorrow is national lollipop day. How about one of these RADIO-ACTIVE lollipops?! Our pictures show scientists testing milk and cheese for the dangerous factor of Iodine 131. What happens if it reaches danger point? Dr Douglas Ash says that the effects of radio-active minerals in fall-out can be counteracted by a dose of the same minerals in natural form. Just take some strontium rock. Add an extract from seaweed and sea-kale, gathered by the doctor’s children on a beach at Bexhill, then mix it with sugar solution, form it - and you’ve got a “strontium lolly“. What’s more, his wife feeds them to the family! Key scene. (2 shots) scientists working on lollies. MCU man pours milk into tube. MCU cheese being whipped up. MCU man presses out cheese rings. CU lolly (before being frozen). MCU man put lollies into freezer. (2 shots) controls. (2 shots) Dr Douglas Ash looks at rocks. CU rocks. (2 shots) Dr Ash’s children collecting seaweed. MS ditto. MCU Mrs Ash mixes lolly. CU finished lollies. MS children run to Mrs Ash for their lollies. CU pan children eating lollies. SEE STORY NUMBER 84848/2 FOR CUTS Find out more about AP Archive: Twitter: Facebook: Tumblr: ​​ Instagram:
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